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  • criminal record in the past. In doing so, she helped change the legal profession in Washington state. You’ll meet Rosa Franklin ’74, the first African American woman elected to the Washington State Senate, a member of the Washington State Nurses’ Association Hall of Fame and a success story who exudes the twin virtues of humility and service. You’ll learn how students and advisors are engaging through the new Nate Schoening Center for Student Success — a comprehensive one-stop resource for students

  • shape her future and leave a criminal record in the past. In doing so, she helped change the legal profession in Washington state. You’ll meet Rosa Franklin ’74, the first African American woman elected to the Washington State Senate, a member of the Washington State Nurses’ Association Hall of Fame and a success story who exudes the twin virtues of humility and service. You’ll learn how students and advisors are engaging through the new Nate Schoening Center for Student Success — a comprehensive

  • process to document commitment to teaching. But, SGID content remains confidential. How does the SGID process work? Our policy is to schedule one SGID per faculty member (per semester). Please select the one course where SGID feedback would be most useful to you. Consultants take a maximum of 40-50 minutes of class time. With the instructor absent, students work in small groups to identify course features that facilitate or impede learning and discuss possible changes. The consultant and the whole

  • peoples. It also describes new ritual activities engaged by Kiowas, including a revitalization movement associated with armed resistance, affiliation with Christian churches, and ritual peyote ingestion. The examples show how frontier contact resulted in religious change for everyone involved. Biography: Jennifer Graber is Professor of Religious Studies and an affiliated faculty member in the Native American and Indigenous Studies Program at the University of Texas at Austin. She received her Ph.D. in

  • Remembering Eric Nordholm Posted by: Kate Williams / December 6, 2017 December 6, 2017 By Kate Williams '16Outreach ManagerEric (Nordie) Nordholm will forever remain a legacy in the PLU theatre department. David Robbins, Senior Advancement Officer and former chair of the music department recounts Eric’s impact at PLU. “Nordie was a longtime faculty member in the Theater Department at PLU. He was hired in 1955 and served 35 years at the university. He is fondly remembered for directing musical

  • Professor Wendy Shore receives 2023 Faculty Excellence Award in Mentoring Posted by: nicolacs / January 25, 2024 Image: The Psychology Department, Friday, Oct. 14, 2022, at PLU. (PLU Photo / Sy Bean) January 25, 2024 By Jeffrey RobertsPLU Marketing & CommunicationsThe Faculty Excellence Award in Mentoring recognizes the efforts of a faculty member who serves as a personal or professional guide to students or colleagues and makes a profound difference in the lives of others as a role model

  • Remembering Eric Nordholm Posted by: Kate Williams / December 6, 2017 December 6, 2017 By Kate Williams '16Outreach ManagerEric (Nordie) Nordholm will forever remain a legacy in the PLU theatre department. David Robbins, Senior Advancement Officer and former chair of the music department recounts Eric’s impact at PLU. “Nordie was a longtime faculty member in the Theater Department at PLU. He was hired in 1955 and served 35 years at the university. He is fondly remembered for directing musical

  • . There she met Werner Vetter, a Nazi party member who fell in love with her. And despite her protests and even her eventual confession that she was Jewish, he married her and kept her identity secret. The two of them – the Nazi and his Jewish wife – lived out the ware together, even bearing a child. The film explores faith, family, identity, and love in this complex portrait of a woman who had to bury her true self in order to survive.” – synopsis from www.7thart.com. The Return7:30-9:00 p.m

  • . There she met Werner Vetter, a Nazi party member who fell in love with her. And despite her protests and even her eventual confession that she was Jewish, he married her and kept her identity secret. The two of them – the Nazi and his Jewish wife – lived out the ware together, even bearing a child. The film explores faith, family, identity, and love in this complex portrait of a woman who had to bury her true self in order to survive.” – synopsis from www.7thart.com. The Return7:30-9:00 p.m

  • . There she met Werner Vetter, a Nazi party member who fell in love with her. And despite her protests and even her eventual confession that she was Jewish, he married her and kept her identity secret. The two of them – the Nazi and his Jewish wife – lived out the ware together, even bearing a child. The film explores faith, family, identity, and love in this complex portrait of a woman who had to bury her true self in order to survive.” – synopsis from www.7thart.com. The Return7:30-9:00 p.m